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Glossary

of pro audio terms


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Glossary

This Glossary contains brief denitions of
many of the audio and electronic terms and
acronyms used in discussions of sound mixing
and recording. Many of the terms have other
meanings or nuances or very rigorous technical
denitions, which we have sidestepped here
because we gure you already have a lot on
your mind.
If youd like to get more information, there are
plenty of useful textbooks out there. We recom-
mend the following titles:

The Audio Dictionary


by Glenn White,

Tech Terms

by Peterson &
Oppenheimer,

Handbook for Sound Engineers

by
Glen Ballou,

Mackie Mixer Book

by Rudy Tru-
bitt,

Pro Audio Reference

by Dennis Bohn, and

Sound Reinforcement Handbook

by Gary Davis.

A

ACRONYM

An acronym for A Contrived Reduction Of
Nomenclature Yielding Mnemonics

adiabatic

Literally, it means "not to pass through." In
describing the high-density foam used inside
the HR Series studio monitors, it means that
internal reections within the cabinet are
absorbed by the foam. In physical terms, it
means the mechanical energy of the sound
wave is converted into heat energy.

A/D converter (ADC)

Analog-to-digital converter, a device that trans-
forms incoming analog signals into digital
form.

AFL

An acronym for After Fade Listen, which is
another way of saying post-fader solo function.

aliasing

This is a type of distortion caused during the
analog-to-digital conversion process. If the fre-
quency of the analog signal exceeds one-half
the sampling rate, spurious signals and harmon-
ics not present on the original signal may be
created (see Nyquist Theorem). Careful design
and ltering before the sampling stage can
reduce this aliasing to a minimum.

assign

In sound mixers, assign means to switch or
route a signal to a particular signal path or com-
bination of signal paths.

attenuate

To reduce or make quieter.

aux

Short for Auxiliary.

auxiliary

In sound mixers, supplemental equipment or
features that provide additional capabilities to
the basic system. Examples of auxiliary equip-
ment include: serial processors (equalizers,
compressors, limiters, gates) and parallel pro-
cessors (reverberation and delay).

aux send

A mixer bus output designed to send a signal to
an auxiliary processor or monitor system.

aux return

A mixer input (sometimes a pair of inputs) with
limited control capabilities, intended for bring-
ing the output of an auxiliary processor or
other line-level source into the main mix bus.
Aux returns can sometimes be assigned to other
buses in the mixer.
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B

balanced input

An input consists of two leads, neither of which
is common to the circuit ground. This is a dif-
ferential pair, where the signal consists of the

difference

in voltage between the two leads. Bal-
anced input circuits can offer excellent rejec-
tion of common-mode noise induced into the
line.

balanced output

In a classic balanced audio circuit, the output is
carried on two leads (high or + and low or -)
which are isolated from the circuit ground by
exactly the same impedance.
A symmetrical balanced output carries the same
signal at exactly the same level but of opposite
polarity with respect to ground.
A special case of a balanced output carries the
signal on only one lead, with the other lead
being at zero voltage with respect to ground,
but at the same impedance as the signal-carry-
ing lead. This is sometimes called

impedance bal-
anced

.

bandwidth

The band of frequencies that pass through a
device with a loss of less than 3 dB, expressed in
Hertz or in musical octaves. Also see Q.

bit

The smallest component of a digital word, rep-
resented by either a one or a zero.

bridged mono

A mode of operation for a stereo amplier that
routes a single input to both channels, but
inverts the signal on channel 2, thereby provid-
ing twice the voltage of an individual output by
connecting the speaker between the two posi-
tive output terminals (the negative output ter-
minals are not used).

bus

An electrical connection common to three or
more circuits. In mixer design, a bus usually
carries signals from a number of inputs to a
mixing amplier, just like a city bus carries peo-
ple from a number of neighborhoods to their
jobs. It comes from the British omnibus.

C

Cannon

A manufacturer of electrical connectors who
rst popularized the three-pin connector now
universally used for balanced microphone con-
nections. In sound work, a Cannon connector
is taken to mean a Cannon XLR-3 connector or
any compatible connector. You can tell an
audio geezer because he refers to this connector
as Cannon. Today the term XLR is more
common.

cardioid

Heart-shaped. In sound work, cardioid refers to
the shape of the sensitivity vs. direction plot for
a particular style of directional microphone. A
cardioid mic rejects sound arriving from the
rear.

channel

A functional path in an audio circuit: an input
channel, an output channel, a recording chan-
nel, the left channel and so on.

channel strip

The physical realization of an audio channel on
the front panel of a mixer; usually a long, verti-
cal strip of controls.

chorusing

A time-based effect available in some digital
delay effects units and reverbs. Chorusing
involves a number of moving delays and pitch
shifting, usually panned across a stereo eld.
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Depending on how used, it can be lovely or
grotesque.

clipping

A form of severe audio distortion that results
from peaks of the audio signal attempting to
rise above the capabilities of the amplier cir-
cuit. Seen on an oscilloscope, the audio peaks
appear clipped off. To avoid clipping, reduce
the system gain in or before the gain stage in
which the clipping occurs. Also see headroom.

common mode

A signal which is referenced to the circuit com-
mon point, usually chassis ground.

compressor

This is a dynamics processor used to smooth
out any large transient peaks in an audio signal
that might otherwise overload your system or
cause distortion. The amplitude threshold and
other parameters such as attack time, release
time, and tire pressure are adjustable.

condenser

Another term for the electronic component
generally known as a capacitor. In audio, con-
denser often refers to a type of microphone that
uses a capacitor as the sound pickup element.
Condenser microphones require electrical
power to run internal ampliers and maintain
an electrical charge on the capacitor. They are
typically powered by internal batteries or
phantom power supplied by an external
source, such as a mixing console.

console

Another term for a sound mixer, usually a large
desk-like mixer.

crest factor

The ratio of the peak value to the RMS value.
Musical signals can have peaks many times
higher than the RMS value. The larger the tran-
sient peaks, the larger the crest factor.

cueing

In broadcast, stage and post-production work,
to cue up a sound source (a record, a sound
effect on a CD, a song on a tape) means to get
it ready for playback by making sure you are in
the right position on the cue, making sure the
level and EQ are all set properly. This requires a
special monitoring circuit that only the mixing
engineer hears. It does not go out on the air or
to the main mixing buses. This cueing circuit
is the same as pre-fader (PFL) solo on a Mackie
mixer, and often the terms are interchangeable.

D

D/A converter (DAC)

Digital-to-analog converter, a device that trans-
forms incoming digital signals into analog
form.

damping

Damping factor is a number that represents the
ratio of the impedance of the load to the out-
put impedance of the amplier. In practical
terms, it is a measure of how well the amplier
can control the movement of a speaker's cone.
The greater the damping factor, the better its
ability to control the cone's movement. A low
damping factor (high amplier output imped-
ance) allows a woofer to continue to move after
the signal stops, resulting in an indistinct and
mushy low frequency response. A high damp-
ing factor (200 or above) provides excellent
control over low frequency woofers and pro-
duces a tight, clean bass.

DAT

Digital Audio Tape is a recording/playback sys-
tem where analog signals are converted to digi-
tal form and stored on magnetic tape. It offers
all the benets of digital audio including low
noise and wide dynamic range.
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DAW

Digital Audio Workstation is a dedicated
recording/editing software application and
hardware system, used for hard disk (non-lin-
ear) random access recording and playback.
Many DAWs are used with personal computers
using Windows or Macintosh operating
systems, though some use their own proprietary
computers.

dB

See decibel.

dBA

Sound Pressure Level (SPL) measured with an
"A" weighting lter.

dBm

A unit of measurement of power in an electrical
circuit, expressed in decibels referenced to 1
milliwatt. The m in dBm stands for milli-
watt. In a circuit with an impedance of 600
ohms, this reference (0 dBm) corresponds to a
signal voltage of 0.775 VRMS (because 0.775 V
across 600 ohms equals 1 mw).

dBu

A unit of measurement of audio signal voltage
in an electrical circuit, expressed in decibels ref-
erenced to 0.775 VRMS into any impedance.
Commonly used to describe signal levels within
a modern audio system. Nobody is really sure if
u stands for anything.

dBv

A unit of measurement equal to the dBu no
longer in use in the US, but sometimes still in
Great Britain. It was too easy to confuse a dBv
with a dBV, to which it is not equivalent.

dBV

A unit of measurement of audio signal voltage
in an electrical circuit, expressed in decibels ref-
erenced to 1 VRMS across any impedance.
Commonly used to describe signal levels in
consumer equipment. To convert dBV to dBu,
add 2.2 dB.

decibel (dB)

The dB is a ratio of quantities measured in sim-
ilar terms using a logarithmic scale. Many audio
system parameters measure over such a large
range of values that the dB is used to simplify
the numbers. A ratio of 1000:1=60 dB. Since
dB is a unitless quantity, it doesnt matter if its
volts or dollars. (just try asking the chief engi-
neer for a 3 dB raise) When one of the terms in
the ratio is an agreed upon standard value such
as 1.23 V, 1 V or 1 mw, the ratio becomes an
absolute value, i.e., +4 dBu, -10 dBV or 0 dBm.

delay

In sound work, delay usually refers to an elec-
tronic circuit or effects unit whose purpose it is
to delay the audio signal for some short period
of time. Delay can refer to one short repeat, a
series of repeats or the complex interactions of
delay used in chorusing or reverb. When
delayed signals are mixed back with the original
sound, a great number of audio effects can be
generated, including phasing and anging, dou-
bling, Haas precedence-effect panning, slap or
slapback, echo, regenerative echo, chorusing
and hall-like reverberation. Signal time delay is
central to many audio effects units.

detent

A point of slight physical resistance (a click-
stop) in the travel of a knob or slide control.
Most knobs on Mackie mixers are detented to
indicate their unity gain or centered position.
Its handy in the dark.

diffraction

The bending of sound waves around an obsta-
cle (Huygens Principle). The longer the wave-
length in comparison to the obstacle, the more
the wave will diffract around it.
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dipping

The opposite of peaking, of course, used in
audio to describe the shape of a frequency
response curve. A dip in an EQ curve looks like
a valley, or a dip. Dipping with an equalizer
reduces a range of frequencies. (See guacamole.)

dither

This is an interesting technique to reduce the
audibility of low level noise in a digital record-
ing. Low level random noise is added to the
analog signal before the sampling stage, reduc-
ing an effect called quantization error.

doubling

A delay effect, where the original signal is
mixed with a medium (20 to 50 ms) delayed
copy of itself. When used carefully, this effect
can simulate double-tracking (recording a voice
or instrument twice).

dry

Usually means without reverberation, or with-
out some other applied effect like delay or cho-
rusing. Dry is not wet, i.e., totally unaffected.

DSP

Digital Signal Processing can accomplish the
same functions found in analog signal proces-
sors, but performs them mathematically in the
digital domain, with more precision and accu-
racy than its analog counterpart. Since DSP is a
software-based process, parameters and process-
ing functions are easily changed and updated
by revising the software, rather than redesigning
the hardware. DSP can be found in an out-
board effects device, such as a reverb or delay
unit, or it can be integrated into a DAW or dig-
ital mixing console.

dual mono

A mode of operation for a stereo amplier that
routes a single input to both channels, but still
allows independent level control over each
amplier output.

dynamic microphone

The class of microphones that generate electri-
cal signals by the movement of a coil in a mag-
netic eld. Dynamic microphones are rugged,
relatively inexpensive, capable of very good per-
formance and do not require external power.

dynamics processor

A type of processor that only affects the overall
amplitude level of the signal (sometimes as a
function of its frequency content), such as a
compressor, expander, limiter, or gate.

dynamic range

The range between the maximum and mini-
mum sound levels that a sound system can han-
dle. It is usually expressed in decibels as the
difference between the level at peak clipping
and the level of the noise oor.

E

echo

The reection of sound from a surface such as a
wall or a oor. Reverberation and echo are
terms that are often used interchangeably, but
in audio parlance a distinction is usually made:
echo is considered to be a distinct, recognizable
repetition (or series of repetitions) of a word,
note, phrase or sound, whereas reverberation is
a diffuse, continuously smooth decay of sound.
Echo and reverberation can be added in sound
mixing by sending the original signal to an elec-
tronic (or electronic/acoustic) system that mim-
ics natural echoes, and then some. The added
echo is returned to the mix through additional
mixer inputs.

effects device or
effect processor

An external signal processor used to add reverb,
delay, spatial or psychoacoustic effects to an
audio signal. An effects processor may be used
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as an insert processor (serial) on a particular
input or subgroup, or it may be used via the
aux send/return system (parallel). See also echo,
reverb.

EIN

Equivalent Input Noise. A specication that
helps measure the quietness of a gain stage by
deriving the equivalent input noise voltage nec-
essary to obtain a given preamps output noise.
Numerically, its the output noise at a given
gain setting minus the gain. EIN is usually mea-
sured at maximum gain and typically ranges
from -125 to -130 dBm.

EMI

Electro-Magnetic Interference. This refers to
current induced into the signal path as a result
of an external magnetic eld. In audio systems,
this is usually manifested as a 60 Hz or 120 Hz
hum or buzz (50 Hz or 100 Hz in 50 Hz sys-
tems). The source of this noise can be from a
ground loop or from the signal wire coming too
close to a strong magnetic eld such as a trans-
former or high-current linecord.

EQ

Short for equalization.

EQ curve

A graph of the response of an equalizer, with
frequency on the x (horizontal) axis and ampli-
tude (level) on the y (vertical) axis. Equalizer
types and effects are often named after the
shape of the graphed response curve, such as
peak, dip, bell, shelf, or notch.

equalization

Equalization (EQ) refers to purposefully chang-
ing the frequency response of a circuit, some-
times to correct for previous unequal response
(hence the term, equalization), and more often
to boost or cut the level at certain frequencies
for sound enhancement, to remove extraneous
sounds, or to create completely new and differ-
ent sounds.
Bass and treble controls on your stereo are EQ;
so are the units called parametrics and graphics
and notch lters.
A lot of how we refer to equalization has to do
with what a graph of the frequency response
looks like. A at response (no EQ) is a straight
line; a peak looks like a hill, a dip is a valley, a
notch is a really skinny valley, and a shelf looks
like a plateau (or a shelf). The slope is the grade
of the hill on the graph.
Aside from the level controls, EQs are probably
the second most powerful controls on any
mixer (no, the power switch doesnt count!).

F

fader

Another name for an audio level control.
Today, the term refers to a straight-line slide
control rather than a rotary control.

family of curves

A composite graph showing on one chart sev-
eral examples of possible EQ curves for a given
equalizer or equalizer section.

filter

A simple equalizer designed to remove certain
ranges of frequencies. A low-cut lter (also
called a high-pass lter) attenuates frequencies
below its cutoff frequency. There are also high-
cut (low-pass) lters, bandpass lters, which cut
both high and low frequencies but leave a band
of frequencies in the middle untouched, and
notch lters, which remove a narrow band but
leave the high and low frequencies alone.

flanging

A term for an effect similar in sound to phas-
ing. Before we had electronic delay units, ang-
ing was accomplished by playing two tape
machines in synchronization, then delaying
one slightly by rubbing a nger on the reel
ange. Get it?
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FOH

An acronym for Front Of House. See house
and main house speakers. Nobody involved
with audio ever goes to the Back of House
because they never have time to drink enough
beer.

frequency

The number of times an event repeats itself in a
given period of time. Generally the time period
for audio frequencies is one second, and fre-
quency is measured in cycles per second, abbre-
viated Hz, honoring the physicist Dr. Heinrich
Hertz (who did not invent the rental car). One
Hz is one cycle per second. One kHz (kilo-
hertz) is 1000 cycles per second.
The audio frequency range is generally consid-
ered to be 20 Hz to 20, 000 Hz. This covers the
fundamental pitch and most overtones of musi-
cal instruments.

G

gain

The measure of how much a circuit amplies a
signal. Gain may be stated as a ratio of input to
output voltage, current or power, such as a volt-
age gain of 4, or a power gain of 1.5, or it can
be expressed in decibels, such as a line amplier
with a gain of 10 dB.

gain stage

An amplication point in a signal path, either
within a system or a single device. Overall sys-
tem gain is distributed between the various gain
stages.

gate

A dynamics processor that automatically turns
off an input signal when it drops below a cer-
tain level. This can reduce the overall noise
level of your mix by turning off inputs when
they are not in use. Threshold, attack time,
hold, and release time are some of the adjust-
able gate parameters.

graphic EQ

A graphic equalizer uses slide pots for its boost/
cut controls, with its operating frequencies
evenly spaced through the audio spectrum. In a
perfect world, a line drawn through the centers
of the control shafts would form a graph of the
frequency response curve. Or, the positions of
the slide pots give a graphic representation of
boost or cut levels across the frequency spec-
trum. Get it?

ground

Also called earth. Ground is dened as the
point of zero voltage in a circuit or system, the
reference point from which all other voltages
are measured.
In electrical power systems, ground connec-
tions are used for safety purposes, to keep
equipment chassis and controls at zero voltage
and to provide a safe path for errant currents.
This is called a

safety ground

. Maintaining a
good safety ground is essential to prevent elec-
trical shock. Follow manufacturers suggestions
and good electrical practices to ensure a safely
grounded system. Never remove or disable the
grounding pin on the power cord.
In sensitive electronic equipment, tiny currents
and voltages riding on the ground (so its not
truly zero volts) can cause noise in the circuits
and hamper operation. Often a ground separate
from the power ground is used as the reference
point for the electronics, isolating the sensitive
electronics from the dirty power ground. This is
called a

technical ground

.
Quality audio equipment is designed to main-
tain a good technical ground and also operate
safely with a good safety ground.

ground loop

A ground loop occurs when the technical
ground within an audio system is connected to
the safety ground at more than one place. This
forms a loop around which unwanted current
can, and does ow, causing noise in the audio
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system. Never disable the safety ground in an
attempt to solve hum problems.

guacamole

Just kidding (see dipping).

H

Haas precedence effect

A psychoacoustic effect in which the time of
arrival of a sound to the left and right ears
affects our perception of direction. If a signal is
presented to both ears at the same time and at
the same volume, it appears to be directly in
front of us. But if the signal to one ear, still at
the same volume, is delayed slightly, the sound
appears to be coming from the earlier (non-
delayed) side.

headroom

The difference between nominal operating level
and peak clipping in an audio system. A mixer
with a nominal operating level of +4 dBu and a
maximum output level of +22 dBu has 18 dB
of headroom. Plenty of room for surprise peaks.

Hertz

The unit of frequency, equal to 1 cycle per sec-
ond. Abbreviated Hz. kHz 1000 Hz, and is usu-
ally pronounced kay(with Hertz implied)
by sound professions who ask for a little more
two and a half K when they want you to boost
2.5 kHz.

house

In Sound Reinforcement parlance, house
refers to the systems (and even persons) respon-
sible for the primary sound reinforcement in a
given hall, building, arena or house. Hence
we have the house mixer or house engineer, the
house mix, the house mix amps, the main
house speakers and so on.

Hz

Short for Hertz.

I

impedance

The A.C. resistance, capacitance, and induc-
tance in an electrical circuit, measured in ohms.
In audio circuits (and other ac circuits) the
impedance in ohms can often be much differ-
ent from the circuit resistance as measured by a
dc ohmmeter.
Maintaining proper circuit impedance relation-
ships is important to avoid distortion and mini-
mize added noise. Mackie input and output
impedances are set to work well with the vast
majority of audio equipment.

input module

A holdover from the days when the only way
that real consoles were built was in modular
fashion, one channel per module. See channel
strip.

insert

Noun a place where a signal path can be bro-
ken and a processing device placed in line with
the signal. Its usually a TRS jack with one con-
ductor being an output (send) and the other
being an input (return). The jack is wired with a

normalled connection

so that with nothing
plugged in, the send and return are connected
together, as if it wasnt even there. In Mackie
mixers, the

insert

jacks are wired with tip as
send, ring as return, and sleeve as ground.
Verb we dont want to go there.

J
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K

knee

A knee is a sharp bend in a curve (an EQ fre-
quency response or compressor gain curve) not
unlike the sharp bend in your leg.

L

level

Another word for signal voltage, power,
strength or volume. Audio signals are some-
times classied according to their level. Com-
monly used levels are: microphone level (-40
dBu or lower), instrument level (-20 to -10
dBu), and line level (-10 to +30 dBu).

line level

A signal whose level falls between -10 dBu and
+30 dBu.

M

main (house) speakers

The main loudspeakers for a sound reinforce-
ment system. These are usually the largest and
loudest loudspeakers, and are usually posi-
tioned so that their sound seems to come from
the area of the main stage.

mains

Short for

main

or

house speakers

in a sound rein-
forcement system.

master

A control affecting the nal output of a bus on
which one or more signals are mixed. A mixer
may have several master controls, which may
be slide faders or rotary controls.

mic amp
See mic preamp.
mic level
The typical level of a signal from a microphone.
A mic level signal (usually but not always com-
ing from a microphone) is generally lower than
-30 dBu. With a very quiet source (a pin drop-
ping?) the signal can be -70 dBu or lower.
Some microphones, notably vintage or vintage-
style condenser mics, deliver a higher signal
level than this for the same sound pressure
level. A hot mic output level isnt necessarily
a measure of the microphones quality, its just
an option that the designer chose.
mic pre
Short for mic preamp.
mic preamp
Short for microphone preamplier. An ampli-
er whose job is to bring the very low micro-
phone level signal up to line level, or in the
case of a mic preamp built into a mixer, the
mixers internal operating level (approximately
0 dBu).
Mic preamps often have their own volume con-
trol, called a trim control, to properly set the
gain for a particular source. Setting the mic
preamp gain correctly with the trim control is
an essential step in establishing good signal-to-
noise ratio and sufcient headroom for your
mix.
MIDI
Acronym for Musical Instrument Digital Inter-
face. MIDI is the music industrys standard
serial communication protocol for the interface
and control of musical instruments.
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mixer
An electronic device used to combine various
audio signals into a common output. Different
from a blender, which combines various fruits
into a common libation.
monaural
Long for mono. Literally, pertaining to or hav-
ing the use of only one ear.
In the audio eld, monaural describes a signal
or system which carries audio information on a
single channel with the intent of reproducing it
from a single source. One microphone is a
mono source; many microphones mixed to one
channel is a mono mix; a stereo (or, to be picky,
a two-channel) mix of many microphones
panned left and right is a stereo mix of mono
sources.
Monaural listening, and therefore mono com-
patibility of a stereo mix, is more important
than you may realize. Most people hear televi-
sion audio in mono. Most clock radios are
mono.
monitor
In sound reinforcement, monitor speakers (or
monitor headphones or in-the-ear monitors) are
those speakers used by the performers to hear
themselves. In the video and broadcast world,
monitor speakers are often called foldback
speakers. In recording, the monitor speakers are
those used by the engineer and production staff
to listen to the recording as it progresses. In
zoology, the monitor lizard is the lizard that
observes the production staff as the recording
progresses. Keep the lizard out of the mixer.
mono
Short for monaural.
mult
Short for multiple. In audio work, a mult is a
parallel connection (in a patch bay or with spe-
cially built cables or wiring) used to feed an
output to more than one input. A Y cable is a
type of mult connection. Also used a verb, as in
Why did you mult the anger into every input
in the board?
N
noise
Whatever you dont want to hear. Could be
hum, buzz or hiss; could be crosstalk or digital
hash or your neighbors stereo; could be white
noise or pink noise or brown noise; or it could
be your mother-in-law reliving the day she had
her gallstone removed.
noise floor
The residual level of noise in any system. In a
well designed mixer, the noise oor will be a
quiet hiss, which is the thermal noise generated
by electrons bouncing around in resistors and
semiconductor junctions. The lower the noise
oor and the higher the headroom, the more
usable dynamic range a system has.
normal
A wiring method which electrically ties together
two jacks or two poles of one jack so that in nor-
mal operation, there is signal ow between
them. Inserting a plug breaks this connection,
allowing the signal path to be modied. Normal
wiring is common in patchbays and insert jacks.
Nyquist sampling theorem
This theorem states that, when an analog signal
is converted to a digital signal, it must be sam-
pled at a frequency that is at least twice the
highest audio frequency present in the analog
signal. If the audio frequency should exceed
one-half the sampling frequency, aliasing can
result. Thus, if an analog-to-digital converter is
sampling at 44.1 kHz, the audio signal should
not exceed 22.05 kHz.
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O
P
PA
Acronym for Public Address. Today, people
who work with PA systems like to say theyre
working in sound reinforcement. See SR.
pan, pan pot
Short for panoramic potentiometer. A pan pot
is used to position (or even dynamically move)
a monaural sound source in a stereo mixing
eld by adjusting the sources volume between
the left and right channels. Our brains sense ste-
reo position by hearing this difference in loud-
ness when the sound strikes each ear, taking
into account time delay, spectrum, ambient
reverberation and other cues.
parallel mono
A mode of operation for a stereo amplier that
routes a single input to both channels, but
combines the outputs of both channels into a
single output by strapping the positivie output
terminals together, thereby providing twice the
current of an individual output.
patchbay
A collection of usually a large number of jacks
allowing convenient access to various points in
a systems interconnect wiring. A patchbay can
make re-routing signals very convenient with-
out having to sh around with cables in the
back of racks or consoles. See spaghetti.
parametric EQ
A fully parametric EQ is an extremely power-
ful equalizer that allows smooth, continuous,
and independent control of each of the three
primary EQ parameters: frequency, gain, and
bandwidth. Semi parametric EQs allow con-
trol of fewer parameters, usually frequency and
gain (i.e., they have a xed bandwidth, but vari-
able center frequency and gain).
peaking
The opposite of dipping, of course. A peak is an
EQ curve that looks like a hill, or a peak. Peak-
ing with an equalizer amplies a band of fre-
quencies.
PFL
An acronym for Pre Fade Listen. Broadcasters
would call it cueing. Sound folks call it being
able to solo a channel with the fader down.
phantom power
A system of providing electrical power for con-
denser microphones (and some electronic
pickup devices) from the microphone input
jack. The system is called phantom because the
power is carried on standard microphone audio
wiring in a way that is invisible to ordinary
dynamic microphones. Mackie mixers use stan-
dard +48 volt DC power, switchable on or off.
Most quality condenser microphones are
designed to use +48 VDC phantom power.
Check the manufacturers recommendations.
Generally, phantom power is safe to use with
non-condenser microphones as well, especially
dynamic microphones. However, unbalanced
microphones, some electronic equipment (such
as some wireless microphone receivers) and
some ribbon microphones can short out the
phantom power and be severely damaged.
Check the manufacturers recommendations
and be careful!
phase
The time relationship between two signals,
expressed in degrees around a circle. 0 and 360
degrees represents an in-phase relationship
both signals change in the same way at the
same time. Anything else is out of phase.
180 degrees out of phase is a special case which,
for a continuous waveform, means that at any
given time the two signals have the same ampli-
13
tude but are opposite in polarity. The two legs
of a differential output are 180 degrees out of
phase. The phase reverse switch found on some
mixers or mic preamps actually reverses the sig-
nal polarity.
When out-of-phase signals are mixed, there will
be some cancellation at certain frequencies, the
frequencies and the degree of cancellation
being a function of the amount of phase shift
and the relative amplitude of the signals. Atten-
tion to mic placement and careful listening will
allow you to use this effect creatively.
phasing
A dynamic effect in which the phase relation-
ship between the fundamental and overtone
components of a sound is continually chang-
ing. This is done by passing the signal through
an automatically sweeping lter. The effect is
often simulated by mixing original signal with a
delayed (1 to 10 ms) version of itself. The time
of the delay is slowly varied, and the combina-
tion of the two signals results in a dramatic
moving comb-lter effect. A comb lter can be
found in your back pocket.
phone jack
Ever see those old telephone switchboards with
hundreds of jacks and patch cords and plugs?
Or the plug on the end of a headphone cable?
Those are phone jacks and plugs, now used
widely with musical instruments and audio
equipment. A phone jack is the female connec-
tor, and we use them in 1/4 two-conductor
(TS) and three-conductor (TRS) versions.
phone plug
The male counterpart to the phone jack, right
above.
phono jack
Short for RCA phono jack.
phono plug
Short for RCA phono plug.
post-fader
A term used to describe an aux send (or other
output) that is connected so that it is affected
by the setting of the associated channel fader.
Sends connected this way are typically (but not
always) used for effects. A post-fader output
from a mixer channel usually is also post-EQ. If
pain persists, see your mixers block diagram.
Also see pre-fader.
pot, potentiometer
In electronics, a variable resistor that varies the
potential, or voltage. In audio, any rotary or
slide control.
pre-fader
A term used to describe an aux send (or other
output) that is connected so that it is not
affected by the setting of the associated channel
fader. Sends connected this way are typically
(but not always) used for monitors (foldback).
See post-fader.
proximity effect
The property of many directional microphones
to accentuate their bass response when the
source-to-mic distance is small, typically three
inches or less. Singers generally like this effect
even more than singing in the shower.
Q
Q
A way of stating the bandwidth of a lter or
equalizer section. An EQ with a Q of .75 is
broad and smooth, while a Q of 10 gives a nar-
row, pointed response curve. To calculate the
value of Q, you must know the center fre-
quency of the EQ section and the frequencies
at which the upper and lower skirts fall 3 dB
below the level of the center frequency. Q
equals the center frequency divided by the dif-
ference between the upper and lower 3 dB-
down frequencies. A peaking EQ centered at 10
14
kHz whose -3 dB points are 7.5 kHz and 12.5
kHz has a Q of 2.
quantization
The digital representation of an analog signal
involves sampling the amplitude of the signal
at a fast rate. Quantization is the measurement
of the amplitude at the time of each sample,
expressed is a digital word. Where an analog sig-
nal will be continuous as if it were going up a
smooth path, quantization will have discrete
steps (similar to stair steps).
R
RAM
Random Access Memory is a type of computer
memory that can be read from and written to.
RCA phono jack
Long for RCA jack or phono jack. An RCA
phono jack is an inexpensive connector
(female) introduced by RCA and originally
used to connect phonographs to radio receiv-
ers. The phono jack was (and still is) widely
used on consumer stereo equipment and video
equipment but was quietly fading into obscu-
rity in the professional and semi-professional
sound world. Then phono jacks began cropping
up in early project-studio multitrack recorders,
which (unfortunately) gave them a new lease on
life. Since so many stereo recorders are tted
with them, we decided wed have to put a cou-
ple on our mixers for your convenience. But
make no mistake: the only thing that the
phono jack (or plug) has going for it is low cost.
RCA phono plug
The male counterpart to an RCA phono jack.
regeneration
Also called recirculation. A delay effect created
by feeding the output of a delay back into itself
to cause a delay of the delay of the delay. You
can do it right on the front panel of many
effects units, or you can route the delay return
back into itself on your mixer. Can be a great
deal of fun at parties.
Regeneration is also a fancy name for feedback.
Feedback makes oscillators work and reduces
distortion in ampliers. Feedback in sound
reinforcement systems, a form of oscillation
itself, makes you popular with dogs and unpop-
ular with musicians and audience alike.
return
A return is a mixer line input dedicated to the
task of returning processed or added sound
from reverb, echo and other effects devices.
Depending on the internal routing of your
mixer and your own inclination, you could use
returns as additional line inputs, or you could
route your reverb outputs to ordinary line
inputs rather than the returns.
reverberation, reverb
The sound remaining in a room after the source
of sound is stopped. Its what you hear in a
large tiled room immediately after youve
clapped your hands.
Reverberation and echo are terms that are often
used interchangeably, but in audio parlance a
distinction is usually made: reverberation is
considered to be a diffuse, continuously
smooth decay of sound, whereas echo is one or
more distinct, recognizable repetitions of a
word, note, phrase or sound which decreases in
amplitude with every repeat.
Reverberation and echo can be added in sound
mixing by sending the original sound to an
electronic (or electronic/acoustic) system that
mimics natural reverberation, or worse. The
added reverb is returned to the blend through
additional mixer inputs.
Highly reverberant rooms are called live; rooms
with very little reverberation are called dead. A
sound source without added reverb is dry; one
with reverb or echo added is wet.
15
RFI
Radio Frequency Interference. High frequency
radiation that often results from sparking cir-
cuits. This can be manifested in a number of
ways in audio systems, but is usually evident as
a high-frequency buzz or hash sound.
ROM
Read only memory is a type of computer mem-
ory that cannot be written to, but only read
from.
RMS
An acronym for root mean square, a conven-
tional way to measure the effective average
value of an audio signal or other AC voltage.
Most AC voltmeters are calibrated to read RMS
volts, though on many meters that calibration
is accurate only if the waveform is sinusoidal.
S
Sa value
A measure of the relative liveness of a room. A
low Sa means a very live room, and a high Sa
means a dead room. S = the total surface area
of the room, and a = the average absorption
coefcient of all the surfaces.
sampling frequency
This is the rate at which an analog signal is sam-
pled during the analog-to-digital conversion
process. The sampling rate used for compact
discs is 44.1 kHz, but professional recordings
are often sampled at higher sample rates, such
as 96 kHz or even 192 kHz (thats 192,000 sam-
ples per second!).
send
A term used to describe the output of a second-
ary mix of the input signals, typically used for
foldback monitors, headphone monitors or
effects devices. Mackie mixers call it an Aux
Send.
shelving
A term used to describe the shape of an equal-
izers frequency response. A shelving equal-
izers response begins to rise (or fall) at some
frequency and continues to rise (or fall) until it
reaches the shelf frequency, at which point the
response curve attens out and remains at to
the limits of audibility. If you were to graph the
response, it would look like a shelf. Or more
like a shelf than a hiking boot. See also peaking
and dipping.
signal-to-noise ratio (S/N)
This is a specication that describes how much
noise an audio component has compared to the
signal. It is usually expressed in dB below a
given output level.
slap, slapback
A single-delay echo without any repeats. Also
see echo.
solo
Italian for alone. In audio mixers, a solo circuit
allows the engineer to listen to individual chan-
nels, buses or other circuits singly or in combi-
nation with other soloed signals.
sound reinforcement
A system of amplifying acoustic and electronic
sounds from a performance or speech so that a
large audience can hear clearly. Or, in popular
music, so that a large audience can be excited,
stunned, or even partially deafened by the tre-
mendous amplication. Means essentially the
same thing as PA (Public Address).
spaghetti
That mess of wires and cables in the back of
your rack and/or console. You really can tame
this.
16
SR
An acronym for Sound Reinforcement, which
refers to the process (or a system for) amplify-
ing acoustic and electronic sounds from a per-
formance or speech so that a large audience can
hear clearly. Or, in popular music, so that a
large audience can be excited, stunned or even
partially deafened by the tremendous amplica-
tion. The term SR is to PA (Public Address)
as the term environmental cleanup technolo-
gist is to garbage collector.
steradians
Just as a radian is an angular unit of measure in
2-dimensional space, so a steradian is an angu-
lar unit of measure in 3-dimensional space
(solid angle).
stereo
Believe it or not, stereo comes from a Greek
word that means solid. We use stereo or ste-
reophony to describe the illusion of a continu-
ous, spacious sound eld that is seemingly
spread around the listener by two or more
related audio signals. In practice, stereo often is
taken to simply mean two channels.
surround sound
Multi-channel audio playback systems in four,
ve, or six channel formats. Surround sound is
typically found in movie theaters and home
theater systems.
sweep EQ
An equalizer that allows you to sweep or con-
tinuously vary the frequency of one or more
sections.
symmetrically balanced
See balanced.
T
tinnitus
The ringing in the ears that often results from
prolonged exposure to very loud sound levels.
A sound in the ears, such as buzzing, ringing, or
whistling, caused by volume knob abuse!
trim
In audio mixers, the gain adjustment for the
rst amplication stage of the mixer. The trim
control allows the mixer to accommodate the
wide range of input signal levels that come
from real-world sources. It is important to set
the trim control correctly; its setting determines
the overall noise performance in that channel
of the mixer. See mic preamp.
TRS
Acronym for Tip-Ring-Sleeve, the three parts of
a two-conductor (plus shield) phone plug. Since
the plug or jack can carry two signals and a
common ground, TRS connectors are often
referred to as stereo or balanced plugs or jacks.
Another common TRS application is for insert
jacks, used for inserting an external processor
into the signal path.
TS
Acronym for Tip-Sleeve, the two parts of a sin-
gle conductor (plus shield) phone plug. TS con-
nectors are sometimes called mono or
unbalanced plugs or jacks. A 1/4 TS phone
plug or jack is also called a standard phone plug
or jack.
U
unbalanced
An electrical circuit in which the two legs of the
circuit do not have the identical impedance to
ground. Often one leg is also at ground poten-
17
tial. Unbalanced circuit connections require
only two conductors (signal hot and ground).
Unbalanced audio circuitry is less expensive to
build, but under certain circumstances is more
susceptible to noise pickup.
unity gain
A circuit or system that has its voltage gain
adjusted to be one, or unity. A signal will leave
a unity gain circuit at the same level at which it
entered no amplication, but no loss either.
In Mackie mixers, unity gain is achieved by set-
ting all variable controls to the marked and usu-
ally detented U setting. Mackie mixers are
optimized for best headroom and noise gures
with all gain stages beyond the preamp set at
unity gain.
V
VLZ
Acronym for very low impedance, a Mackie
design principle. VLZ is one of the most impor-
tant reasons why inherent noise levels on
Mackie mixing boards are so minuscule. Ther-
mal noise is generated in all real world elec-
tronic components that have impedance. By
keeping the impedances within the mixer cir-
cuitry low, Mackie keeps internal noise to a
minimum.
volume
The sound level in an audio system. Perhaps
the only thing that some bands have too much
of.
VRMS
Acronym for Volts Root Mean Square. See
RMS.
W
wet
A signal with added reverberation or other
effect like echo, delay or chorusing.
X
XDR
Acronym for eXtended Dynamic Range. XDR
is collection of Mackie circuit design elements
which contribute to the low noise, high head-
room mic preamp circuit employed on many
Mackie mixers.
XLR connector
See Cannon.
Y
Y-Cable
A cable with one input and two outputs, used
to mult a source to two inputs.
Z
Z
The electrical symbol for impedance.
zymurgy
The science of brewing, an important part of
Mackie technology since the factory is located
less than a mile from the Red Hook brewery.
Besides, we needed something other than just
plain Z to put in this A-to-Z glossary.
18
2003 LOUD Technologies Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
LOUD Technologies Inc.
16220 Wood-Red Road NE Woodinville, WA 98072 USA
US and Canada: 800.898.3211
Europe, Asia, Central and South America: 425.487.4333
Middle East and Africa: 31.20.654.4000
Fax: 425.487.4337 www.mackie.com
E-mail: sales@mackie.com

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